Galena, the county seat of Stone County, was established on the banks
of the picturesque James River in 1851. Galena was described as a "dilapidated
little town" by General Samuel Curtis during his march through southern
Missouri in 1862. After the Civil War, the community grew to become the
center of trade in Stone County, but it remained a rural community of the
backwoods. All things considered, Galena seemed an unlikely source from
which a man of greatness might emerge.

But small towns such as Galena, though short on sophistication, are
rich in the qualities which nurture character: industry, honesty, neighborly
compassion, and old-fashioned Christian morality. So, to those familiar
with the people of the Ozarks, it is not surprising that a man of the stature
of Dewey Jackson Short would be born, raised, and prepared for greatness,
a11 in the little town of Galena, Missouri.

Born April 7, 1898, to Jackson Grant and Permelia Cordelia Long Short,
Dewey Jackson Short would often in years to come remark on his family heritage
and allow as to how he was the "long and the short of it." Endowed
with a gregarious personality, superior intelligence, and a remarkable
gift for oratory, Dewey Short was destined to become known far and wide
as the "Orator of the Ozarks," and to serve his district in the
U.S. House of Representatives for twenty-four years.

Short graduated from Galena High School in 1915. He then attended
Marionville College for two years and received his college degree at Baker
University in Baldwin City, Kansas, in 1919. Having decided to enter the
ministry, Short attended Boston College School of Theology from 1919 to
1922, and graduated with honors. Having earned a fellowship to study abroad,
Short and his friend, Earl Marlatt, traveled to Europe to study at Berlin,
Heidelburg and Oxford in 1922-23. Short then became Professor of Philosophy
and Psychology at Southwestern College in Winfield, Kansas.

In 1928, Short ran successfully for the congressional seat in the
14th district which extended from Stone County on the west to the Mississippi
River on the east. After serving one term, he was defeated in the Democratic
landslide of 1930 following the onslaught of the Great Depression which
gave the Republican Party a setback for several years.

After traveling again in Europe and visiting the Soviet Union, Short
ran unsuccessfully for the U. S. Senate in 1932. In 1934, however, he captured
the congressiona1 seat in the newly formed 7th district of southwest Missouri,
a position he held until his eventual defeat in 1956.

Short gained statewide attention for his speaking abilities after
his splendid address to the Republican faithful assembled at the Lincoln
Day festivities in Springfield on February 12, 1926. Short's speech, "Republicanism
and Americanism," created a sensation and placed him in great demand
for speaking engagements throughout Missouri.

In 1935, Short's oratorical flair became the subject of national
attention. Short was highly distressed by the New Deal's concentration
of power in the federal government. He felt that the freedoms of the people
were being eroded by the ever increasing bureaucractic agencies spawned
by the New Deal. On January 23, 1935, he unleased a stinging verbal attack
on the Congress for its participation in this process, saying:

"I deeply and sincerely regret that this body has degenerated
into a supine, subservient, soporific, superfluous, supercilious,pusillanimous
body of nitwits, the greatest ever gathered beneath the dome of our National
Capitol, who cowardly abdicate their powers and, in violation of their
oaths to protect and defend the Constitution against all of the Nation's
enemies, both foreign and domestic, turn over these constitutional prerogatives,
not only granted but imposed upon them,to a group of tax-eating, conceited
autocratic bureaucrats a bunch of theoretical, intellectual, professorial
nincompoops out of Columbia University, at the other end of Pennsylvaoia
Avenue who were never elected by the American people to any office and
who are responsible to no constituency. These brain trusters and 'new dealers'
are the ones who wrote this resolution, instead of the Members of this
House whose duty it is, and whose sole duty it is, to draft legislation."

Short's tirade drew national news coverage, and Time magazine carried
his picture and termed the speech "notable," done in "his
best revivalistic style." Short had made his mark as a major opponent
of New Deal policies, and, thereafter, his voice was heard often in the
halls of Congress and at meetings and rallies throughout the country.

In one memorable exchange of verbal barbs on the House floor, Short's
knowledge of his home state was questioned by a Democratic colleague from
Kentucky. Short replied, saying: "I have been farther back under my
barn hunting for eggs than the gentlemen from Kentucky has ever been away
from home."

In 1937, Short commented on a condition still prevalent today, saying
that the people "seem today to be suffering with the 'gim-mes.' It
is 'gim-me this and gim-me that.' There is very little difference between
Republicans and Democrats when it comes to that sad affliction."

Short held nothing back in criticizing the New Deal. He once said,
"Mr. Jefferson founded the Democratic Party President Roosevelt has
dumfounded it.' And while praising Alf Landon, he sniped at FDR Postmaster
General Jim Farley, saying, "He is not exactly like some men I know
who care no more for their word than a tomcat cares for a marriage license
in a back alley on the blackest night."

Short was a staunch believer in individual initiative. He said: "I
have always been old-fashioned enough to believe it is much better to 'git
up and get' than it is to 'sit down and set.' The only animal I know which
can sit and still produce dividends is the old hen."

Short predicted that if the trend of the times was not checked the
country ran the "danger of fostering a generation of beggars and mendicants."
Though not opposed to progress, Short said: "I know that without change
there would be no progress, but I am not going to mistake mere change for
progress."

Short never lost his affection and pride for his modest upbringing
in Stone County. Speaking to a gathering at Chicago in 1938, he said: "Really,
I am just a plain, ordinary country boy, a native hi11bi11y from the Ozarks
in southwest Missouri, where we still cover our houses with bull hides
and use their tails for lightning rods."

Even Short's political opponents recognized his great talents and
ability. After one of Short's oratorical displays in the House of Representatives,
one of his Democratic colleagues remarked:

"He is, indeed, a gentleman of fine attainments. He came to
the House with a sparkling reputation that he has fully justified. I have
frequently heard him designated as the sage of the Ozarks. In dealing with
any question he is a master, a recognized savant, always having at hand
a fund of devastating information that disarms and paralyzes an opponent
before the opponent fairly starts. No great question is finally settled
before he speaks."

During World War II, Short served on the Military Affairs Committee
of the House. After the war, he traveled to Europe to survey the tragic
scene. He rose to the position of Chairman of the Military Affairs Committee
(later known as the Armed Services Committee) during the only two sessions
in this era when the Repubhcans commanded a majority in the House.

Defeated by Democrat Charlie Brown in 1956, after serving twenty-four
years in Congress, Short was appointed by President Eisenhower in 1957
to serve as Assistant Secretary of the Army. In this capacity he had the
privilege of dedicating the Table Rock Dam in Stone County, a project for
which he had long labored. At the conclusion of the Eisenhower administration,
Short retired from public service in 1961.

Dewey Jackson Short died on November 19, 1979. As he requested, his
body was returned to Galena for burial in the cemetery on top of the hill
overlooking the town.

The Dewey Short Visitors' Center at Table Rock Dam was named in his
honor, and the Dewey J. Short Memorial Museum in Galena is a lasting tribute
to the memory of a famous native son. But the most enduring legacy of this
famous statesman is the lifetime of dedicated public service and advocacy
of the individual freedom exemplified by the life of Dewey J. Short, the
Silver Tongued Orator of the Ozarks.